Then the Jets must have sold the entire row 13 in section 237 to a broker, since every seat has been listed on Stubhub all season. My friend's seats are in row 14 of that same section.....Those underpriced tickets hurt my buddy when he tries to sell his tickets. They have been listed under face for almost every game, only the Pats game are listed at face value.

Then the Jets must have sold the entire row 13 in section 237 to a broker, since every seat has been listed on Stubhub all season. My friend's seats are in row 14 of that same section.....Those underpriced tickets hurt my buddy when he tries to sell his tickets. They have been listed under face for almost every game, only the Pats game are listed at face value.

I was shocked game was packed last night. those low priced seats all sold and butts were in seats. I did not see a single empty seat in the sections by me.

Then the Jets must have sold the entire row 13 in section 237 to a broker, since every seat has been listed on Stubhub all season. My friend's seats are in row 14 of that same section.....Those underpriced tickets hurt my buddy when he tries to sell his tickets. They have been listed under face for almost every game, only the Pats game are listed at face value.

Club seats are a losing proposition. Mezz seats in old stadium at $115 was a tough sell. Why should they be easier to sell at $295.

I was shocked game was packed last night. those low priced seats all sold and butts were in seats. I did not see a single empty seat in the sections by me.

I was shocked too. I thought we'd be able to sit anywhere. There were dozens of seats for sale right up to the end in section 137. When we came in just before the National Anthem, we plopped ourselves down in row 22 there instead of going to our regular seats in the adjacent 135 (we had a guest with us with an upper ticket she bought for $20 but wanted her to sit with us.) Enjoyed it there until about midway through the second quarter around 9:15 when the row finally filled up and we trotted on over to our seats in 135 where we found enough space for all 4 of us a couple of rows in front of our regular seats. Place was packed.

Not quite. NFL Ticket exchange sets the minimum at face value. The Jets put the extras at below face on Stub Hub through brokers. Entire rows in the club seats were for sale.

There was an article today in the Post from a reliable source that said the Jets have approximately 10,000 seats unsold including Club seats.

In a stadium that seats 82,500 fans, that's 12% of the seats unsold.

There are 12,500 Club seats. I think we can agree that approximately 50% of them remain unsold. That is 6,250 seats right there.

There are 27,000 upper deck seats. If we take the remaining 4,750 and put them up there, that's 18% of those seats remaining unsold. If you eyeball the stadium in your head, you'll see that those 4,750 seats are in the end zones or up top by the light-poles, consistent with what we notice on gamedays.

So that's 88% of the stadium sold including Club seats, so on average, the Jets are able to sell 8% of the seats each week and are eating 10% of the remaining seats in the stadium, the majority being the expensive Club seats.

But all that really should matter to a Jets fan is attendance. It's what determines if we are loud enough, it's what shows up on TV as a full stadium, it's what shows the overall support the franchise has. NFL records tell us that attendance fill rates are sitting at 96%, same as the first 2 seasons in MetLife, same as the last season in Giants Stadium.

Importantly, if 10 to 15% of the seats each week are up for sale on third-party websites, the fans are buying them and filling the seats. If PSL owners or the Jets themselves lose a little money on these transactions, that's the way it goes. PSL owners expect that based on our history, and the Jets themselves knew this was a risk when they left the upper deck to go without PSL.

There was an article today in the Post from a reliable source that said the Jets have approximately 10,000 seats unsold including Club seats.

In a stadium that seats 82,500 fans, that's 12% of the seats unsold.

There are 12,500 Club seats. I think we can agree that approximately 50% of them remain unsold. That is 6,250 seats right there.

There are 27,000 upper deck seats. If we take the remaining 4,750 and put them up there, that's 18% of those seats remaining unsold. If you eyeball the stadium in your head, you'll see that those 4,750 seats are in the end zones or up top by the light-poles, consistent with what we notice on gamedays.

So that's 88% of the stadium sold including Club seats, so on average, the Jets are able to sell 8% of the seats each week and are eating 10% of the remaining seats in the stadium, the majority being the expensive Club seats.

But all that really should matter to a Jets fan is attendance. It's what determines if we are loud enough, it's what shows up on TV as a full stadium, it's what shows the overall support the franchise has. NFL records tell us that attendance fill rates are sitting at 96%, same as the first 2 seasons in MetLife, same as the last season in Giants Stadium.

Importantly, if 10 to 15% of the seats each week are up for sale on third-party websites, the fans are buying them and filling the seats. If PSL owners or the Jets themselves lose a little money on these transactions, that's the way it goes. PSL owners expect that based on our history, and the Jets themselves knew this was a risk when they left the upper deck to go without PSL.